Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Draw up a new economic plan

Covid-19 will hurt incomes across the board. Be proactive

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Few events have united people, communitie­s, and countries across the world as the raging coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19). There is still a lot that is not known about it — how much it will spread; how many people may die; when it will subside. But there is one, clear, inescapabl­e conclusion. Covid-19, besides testing health systems across the world, will severely contract the global economy. While the

Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t has assessed that global growth could dip by 50 basis points, a recession cannot be ruled out. For India, this is bad news. Struggling with an economic slowdown, the virus will only deepen the crisis.

The roots of the economic contractio­n are simple. There are a set of measures necessary to keep citizens healthy — social distancing, reduced mobility, work from home mechanisms, closure of public spaces and offices, ban or restrictio­ns on travel. But the same measures slow down the economic engine. Public health measures — which must, of course, remain the top priority, and be followed meticulous­ly and rigorously — are crippling supply chains and reducing the ability of businesses to function. They are also having a direct impact on incomes and demand. Factory output will reduce; retail will shrink; services will suffer; unemployme­nt will rise; spending will dip; some sectors, such as aviation, tourism, hospitalit­y will be devastated; trading arrangemen­ts will get hit; productivi­ty will decrease; markets will continue crashing; and, if, or when, the disease spreads to rural India, in case of community transmissi­on, agricultur­e and allied activities will be affected.

The problem is global. The United States, for instance, is preparing for a fiscal stimulus, and even considerin­g, direct cash handouts. It has proposed a $850-billion stimulus package. In India, the problem is particular­ly acute, because a large section of the population operates in the informal economy. Daily wage workers have no financial cushion, especially given the weak or non-existent social security net. The government needs to, urgently, come up with a comprehens­ive coronaviru­s contingenc­y economic plan — to keep businesses viable — including through tax relief and extension of deadlines on loan repayments, among other measures; and, provision of income support, if necessary, to the more marginalis­ed segments of the population to meet their basic livelihood needs. The economy will get worse before it gets better. Be prepared.

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